The planet diameters in the Solar system are:
Mercury 4,878 kilometers (km)
Venus 12,100 km
Earth 12, 742 km
Mars 6,792 km
Jupiter 142,981 km around its equator, and
133,708 km around the north & south poles. Jupiter is made of gas, so its tremendously fast revolution time makes it bulge out around its equator.
Saturn 120,536 km at equator and 108,728 km around poles
Uranus 51,118 km
Neptune 49,500 km
There is a little bulge in Uranus and Neptune, but not really enough to report.
There are 5 rocky planets in our solar system if you count Pluto. If not, there are 4 rocky planets in the solar system.
Planets that are not part of our solar system and in other solace systems are called exo-solar planets or exoplanets.
Name the planets that do not exist in the solar system
One way to categorize the solar system's planets?
Yes because Pluto is no longer in our solar system and the planets after Pluto are not in our solar system
Not in our solar system. The inner planets are smaller.
Click on the link below for lots of planet facts from NASA, including diameters of the planets.
No two planets within our solar system have the same exact size. However, Earth and Venus are quite close - their diameters differ by only 652km.
9 P in the S S = 9 Planets in the Solar System
Our solar system is the planets
There are nine planets in the solar system
Extra solar planets are planets that is outside of our solar system.
There are eight planets and five dwarf planets in our solar system.
There are 5 rocky planets in our solar system if you count Pluto. If not, there are 4 rocky planets in the solar system.
Planets that are not part of our solar system and in other solace systems are called exo-solar planets or exoplanets.
Name the planets that do not exist in the solar system
There are 8 planets in the solar system